SAFETY HARNESS TRAINING - This course covers the safe and correct use of Harnesses together with details of the relevent regulations and working at height procedures etc. The candidates will also learn how to inspect and record findings with regard to current legislation and HSE Guidelines. 1 Day. ***** If candidates have had Working at Height Training, the HARNESS TRAINING only is 1/2 day, otherwise 1 Day

Course
Title; Safety HarnessDuration; ½ dayAwarding
Body; One Call Training or IPAF whichever course is selectedCourse
price; From £65pp + vatOn Site
course price ; Call for quotationCandidates
per Course; Maximum 15Award;
Certificate of attendance or IPAF Certificate and Photo ID Card depending on
route selectedThis course
can be combined with our Work at Height course and both delivered in one day
- This course covers the safe and correct use of Harnesses
together with details of the relevant regulations and working at height
procedures etc. The candidates will also learn how to inspect and record
findings with regard to current legislation and HSE Guidelines. If candidates
have had Working at Height Training, the HARNESS TRAINING only is 1/2 day,
otherwise 1 Day.
Our
instructors are approved Harness Manufacturers trainers as well as approved IPAF Instructors
and as such
we are able to offer either an IPAF accreditation as well as our own**
** Our own
course also covers recording inspection results and is approx. 1hr longer than
the IPAF course
Comprehensive course includes ;Legislation
Categories for Safe Work at Height Traceability Types of Harness Work restraint
Fall Arrest Causes of deterioration and degredation of Harness material Equipment Checks
Rescue proceduresOther PPE requirements with regard to Working at heights Practical session ( Correct fitting procedures ) Multiple answer Question paper and practical evaluation at
the end of the course

ENQIRE ABOUT OUR RANGE OF SAFETY HARNESSES AT COMPETITIVE PRICES

- A Merseyside builder has been fined £1,500 and ordered to pay costsof £1000 after he and another man were spotted working on a pub roof in St Helenswithout safety equipment.

HSE prosecuted Charles Molloy from Molloy Building Contractors after an inspectorspotted the men on the roof of the Black Horse Hotel on Park Road on 18 June 2009.

St Helens Magistrates' Court heard that Mr Molloy, 64, had been hired to replace theridge tiles on the top of the pub roof. But neither he nor the worker he employedwore harnesses, put up scaffolding or took any other safety precautions.

- A homebuilding firm has been fined after a 17-year-old apprenticejoiner fell from the first floor of a house he was working on.The trainee fell almost nine feet to a concrete floor from the first floor of thenew build home through an unguarded stairwell injuring his head and legs.

Stonehaven Sheriff Court heard that apart from a plywood sheet placed over thestairwell entrance there was no edge protection or guards in place to preventemployees from falling through the open stairwell.

- Two directors of a decorating firm have been prosecuted after aworker was left brain damaged while working at a residential refurbishment.Self-employed Trevor Dawson from Ravensthorpe, West Yorkshire, was working as apainter on a student accommodation refurbishment when the incident happened 15August 2007.

The HSE investigation found principal contractor Foster Turn-Key Contracts Ltd andLiversedge Decorating Contractors Ltd, contracted to decorate the flats, had allowedwork to be carried out that was not adequately planned or supervised and had usedinappropriate equipment.

Liversedge Decorating Contractors Ltd pleaded guilty to breaching regulation 4 (1)of the Work at Height Regulations 2005, and were fined £2,000. Paul Daniel ofBrighouse, and Clive Dewhirst of Dewsbury, both directors of the firm, also pleadedguilty to the same charge. They were fined £1,000 each. Foster Turn-Key Contractorsof Huddersfield, pleaded guilty to breaching Regulation 22 (1) of the Construction(Design and Management) Regulations 2007. They were fined £2,000.http://www.hse.gov.uk/press/2010/coi-yh-10310.htm?ebul=cons/mar10&cr=12